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Healing The Masculine Soul
Saturday March 1, 2008
"An automatic and serious consequence of a man's failure to be affirmed in his masculine side is that he will suffer from low self-esteem. He will be unable to accept himself. Men who are unable to fully accept themselves lose to one degree or another the power to act as father, husband, and leader. In short, in an at least some part of their personalities they remain immature and become increasingly passive, and unable to creatively to initiate the changes needed to lift themselves and their families out of the inevitable, quagmires of life, The power is within them to do so. The masculine qualities and gifts are there, but they have not been 'affirmed' into life"
Leanne Payne, Crisis In Masculinity, p. 14.
| | Posted by ronaz at 10:48 PM - | |
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Saturday February 23, 2008
"The case of a man seriously split off from his masculine side and identity was at one time a pathological rarity, a condition to be met with only now and then. Men, affirmed as men by their fathers and the men of the community were by and large free to mature as husbands, fathers, and leaders. In secure possession of their gender identity, the great majority of men moved from the chest, as it were, out of hearts freed from legalisms of childhood, the narcissisms of adolescence, of the perfectionisms of an adulthood spent futiley seeking self-acceptance (or the affirmation of parents). Now, however, what was once the exceptional psychogenic factor, has become, unhappily, a ruling feature of the culture at large. Very few men indeed are adequately affirmed AS MEN (author's emphasis) today, and many are pathologically split off from their masculine side altogether."
Leanne Payne, Crisis In Masculinity, p. 12-13
| | Posted by ronaz at 6:17 PM - | |
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Sunday February 17, 2008
"We are a society without a father, and a nation of men who have a hole in their psyches because their fathers were not there." Jack Balswick, Men at the Crossroads: Beyond Traditional Roles & Modern Options, InterVarsity Press, 1992, p. 40)
Sociologists blame the advent of the modern industrial era as the cause of the above evaluation. While there is a lot truth to this connection, you didn't have to grow up with 'Lunchbox Larry' as a father who went to the mill everyday to experience the above reality.
I grew up on a Canadian farm in the 50s and 60s. My father was an agribusinessman who believed that he needed to 'save the family farm'. His work of salvation lead him to become a traveling executive for the Canadian agribusiness community.
Beginning when I was about 12, my father left our home every Monday to fly a plane to eastern Canada to go to weeklong meetings. He returned on Fridays (and sometimes Saturdays). When he came home he was too busy catching up with his farm business to spend time with me and my siblings. My father was very successful at what he did. When he died our family received letters of condolences from the Prime Minister of Canada and down.
Meanwhile, my father missed my teen years and I missed my father.
About the time my oldest son was 12 I was recruited for a national position with a church organization. The office for job was based in Kansas, however, I would not be required to relocate. After I was offered the position, I checked with the person who had just left the position after about 10 years. He told me that while they may be telling me that the job was about 40% travel/60% home it really was the opposite. There were days, he told me, when his wife met him at the airport in Phoenix, he gave her his suitcase of dirty clothes and she gave him a suitcase of clean clothes. Upon hearing that, I turned down the job offer. The result was that I didn't miss any of my son's ball games for four years!
I have spent many years in groups learning to deal with my father-wound. I am still healing.
2008 (c) Ronald Friesen
| | Posted by ronaz at 2:40 PM - | |
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Sunday February 10, 2008
I am writing this during the week of Valentine celebration in US. This is the week that romance, intimacy, and love are celebrated in western civilization. During this week many men find themselves trying to figure out, 'Is it roses my wife likes?' or 'What kind of chocolates does she enjoy?'
Meanwhile, many men find themselves trying to figure out who they are. The culture sends confusing messages: real men enjoy sports, real men spend time with their famiies, real men make big salaries, real men end their workday with a Coors in their hand, real men give big presents.
So who is a real man? Where is the heart of a man to be discovered?
Actually the 'new men's movement' launched by Robert Bly, Sam Keen and others in the early 1990s says that the real man is all of the above.
Contrary to the common misconception that men are inadequate (which is what the older men's movment proclaimed), these men are men in their own right who understand their role and place in society.
I would say that real men know their wives (or significant other's) tastes, they work hard, they play hard, they are men of faith and they love their families with all their heart.
Is it easy to balance all of these? No.
One of the reasons it is difficult to follow through on these ideals is that we have not had to role models to show us how to do these things well. (I will address this in another blog.)
Meanwhile, have a Happy Valentine's Day.
(c) 2008 Ronald Friesen
| | Posted by ronaz at 9:42 PM - | |
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Saturday February 9, 2008
"I can very well do without God both in my life and in my painting, but I cannot, suffering as I am, do without something which is greater than I am, which is my life, the power to create."
"I put my heart and my soul into my work, and have lost my mind in the process."
| | Posted by ronaz at 10:52 AM - | |
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